FOUR 4 o N COCAS tKA CAMPUS n SOCDAIL WDiDIDLL o NOW YOU KNOW WHO SHE IS. With the final announcement in this publication of the new pledges to the various sororities, wo feel sure that many of the cute now faces that so many of us have "seen around'' and not been able to Identify, will become less of a brain wracking: consideration and more of a charming reality to those of us who want to know the latest campus news. At any rate we were finally able to get all of the mldsemestor dope that we have so far been unable to print, and today's society is just chuck full of good news to aspiring campus Komeos. ALUMNAE of Thi Chi Theta were entertained at the home of Miss Eunice Camp Wednesday evening. Twelve were present at the affair with Mrs. O. R. Martin guests. The evening whs spent at bridge, and table decorations fol lowed the St. Patrick's clay scheme. WEDDING set lor the early part of next week is that of Vivian Johns to Ralph Wehrbein of Plattsmouth. The bride to be is a graduate of the university. ail : ADDITION to February wed dings came with the announce ment of the marriage of Mar garet Reusch of Lincoln to Thillip A. Hoff, also of Lincoln, which took place Feb. 21. Mr. Hoff is a former student at. the university. KATHLEEN Hyink of Lincoln is a new pledge at the Kappa Delta house. Theta Motheri luncheon at the WHAT'S DOING Thursday. Alpha Chi Omega Mothers club, 1 c clock luncheon at the chapter ho.ise. Alpha Deita club, 1 o'clock chapter house. Sigma Alpha lota Mother's club luncheon and meeting at the home of Mrs. O. C. Freiss. Friday. ALPHA SIGMA PHI formal at the Cornhusker hotel. Barb Interclub council and A. W. S. Barb council mixsr at Grant Memorial hall. Saturday. Military Sponsors tea dance, 3:30 to 6 o'clock at the Corn husker hotel. KAPPA DELTA formal at the Cornhusker hotel. Delta Gamma alumnae at the home of Mrs. H. P. Lau, 1 o'clock luncheon. Beta Theta Pi house party. SIGMA Delta Tau announces the pledging of Jean Bebcr of Omaha. MARRIAGE of Jocelyn Ridnour to Clyde A. Knapp, both of Lin coln, took place Monday evening at the home of Rev. and Mrs. Les lie R. Smith. Miss Beatrice Fan ning served as maid-of-honor and Ned Frost as best man. Mr. Knapp has attended the University col lege of engineering. The couple will reside in Omaha where Mr. Knapp is a lieutenant at Fort Crook. OF interest in university circles is the announcement of the mar riage of Sinobia Schwartz of He bron to Robert Manly of McCook. Both are graduates of the uni versity where Mrs. Schwartz won a scholarship in voice. Mr. Manly is a member of Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity. ACTIVES and pledges of Kappa Kappa Gamma were entertained at the chapter house Tuesday night at an informal pajama party. Mrs. Sarah Nelson, housemother for the group, was hostess for the affair. The evening was spent with games and charades, and refresh ments were served later in the eve ning. t A NEW pledge of Beta Sigma P.si is Orville Hubert of Upland, Nebr. MARRIED Monday were Mary Wochncr and John McPermott, both of Wood River. Nohr. Mr. McDermott has attended the uni MILDRED Brenig. of Wilber, and Marjorie Colborn. of Hardy, are recently announced pledges of Gamma Phi Beta. SEEN ON THE CAMPUS. Kappa's harmonizing in a booth in the Drug . . . Smith "Cricket Davis back in town again . . . Dee Young and Bill Gish always to gether . . . Dave Berstein trying to get rid of all of the "Floor the Jays" signs . . . Betty Magee be ing rather indefinite about whether or not she and Floyd Baker are going steady . . . Helen Flansburg and Harriet Hoenig waiting for Dale Oder tinder the clock . . . John Groth with an other love . . . Bill Stenton pa tiently waiting for Kay Davis out side of Andrews . . . Dotty Fulton sliding from U hall to the Moon for her nine o'clock caking hour . . . DeLos Gay wandering around with a "lost" look on his face . . . Betty Van Home always waiting for Sam Francis after class . . . bob Wadhams cutting out paper doi's . . . Fred Graham practicing for Kosmet Klub tryouts . . . How ard Fisher and Bob Huse trying to talk themselves into cutting classes . . . Jane Van Sickle eat ing popcorn and candy In Sosh library . . . Virginia Fleetwood and Pete Hagelii; seen about together . . . Betty Lau and Rebecca Old father jumping over mud puddles . . . a very drunk man frightening everyone about U hall. ALPHA Gamma Rho announces the pledging of Donaid Gates of North Platte, Frank Etalrter of Salem, Beryl and Ben Gast of Wavcrly, Nebr. is I ALPHA Delta Theta announces the pledging of Ruth Bell, Lincoln, and Dorothea Noble, Superior, Nebr. CHAPERONS for the Alpha bigma Phi formal Friday night will be Mr. and Mrs. Rolla Van Kirk and Dr. and Mrs. Norman Carlson, Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Dicrs. THERE'S nothing like keeping a certain member of Delta Upsilon in the public eye, but we feel it our duty to tell the female pur suers that Mr. Sarson is having his 'phone number changed today in the hopes of throwing the huntresses off the scent. The new number will be forthcoming as soon as possible. UNION TO CALL WAR STRIKE OF NATION'S PHI UPSILON OM1CRON USES LEAP YEAR THEME AT PARTY Taking advantage of Feb. 29 to , mounting higher daily, and we employ the Leap Year theme, Phi I hope that anyone wishing to buy " . 1 . . tickets will do so as soon as possi- Upsilon Omicron, national home j special invitation is cx economic honorary society is tended to all women .students on sponsoring a Leap Year party for all students attending the uni versity on Saturday evening, in the Student Activities building on the ag campus. This is to be one of the biggest parties of the year and marks the first time that a party of this type has been given on the Holdrege campus. Mcl Pester and his orchestra, well-known Lincoln band has been secured to furnish the music for dancing at .he party. Tickets Iji- the party are now on sale and may be purchased from any member of Phi Upsilon Omicron or at the door of the Activities building on Saturday evening, according to announce ment made by Althea Barada, general chairman in charge of the affair. Ths admission price has been set at 50 cents per couple. Ticket Sales Mount. FDressiiie: the desire that tho. the campus and we urge them to tret their dates and join in what promises to be one ot the best parties of the year." Ir. keeping with the motif se lected for the affair, cupids and hearts pierced with arrows will he used to decorate the building for the party. Chaperons. Chapeior.s for the party will be Prof, and Mrs. L. K. Crowe and Mr. and Airs. E. L. Anderson. Special invitations to attend the partv have been extended to the Misses Edith Carse, Matilda Pet ers, Dorothy Saville, Evelyn Metz ger, Margaret Fedde and Helen Hengstler. Dec. (rations fur the party are being arranged by Virginia Keim, Ruth Henderson and Bonnie I Spanggard and' Elinor McFaddcn i is in charge of the music arrange ments. The committee in charge of I WHAT DO YOU THINK? I (Continued from Page 1). ' volves spending of large amounts j of money. If this money for these purposes were spent lowara me amelioration of internal conditions instead of toward fighting forces it would bring security and peace of mind from external aggression. This is more especially true when on the other half of the Pacific there is a nation which has asked for arms parity beyond its need. Not even Phi Beta Kappa head quarters knows the official grip of that organization. Joseph P. Lash, Secretary, Sets Demonstration Date April 22. Students in colleges throughout the country will be called from their class rooms on April 22 to participate in the third student strike against war, Joseph P. Lash, executive secretary of the American Student Union, an nounced yesterday. This year it is expected that 350,000 students, double last year's total, will respond to the call of the union, which was formed in December through a merger of the Student League for Industrial De mocracy, the National Student League, and campus liberal and progressive groups. To launch preparations for me strike, a conference of student leaders, representing "various stu dent organizations, college news papers, and student councils, has been summoned for thid Saturday at the offices of the union, Mr. Lash said. At that time a preliminary call, embodying a statement of the origin and aims of the strike, will be drafted for submission to stu dent leaders, prominent educators, civic groups and national leaders who will comprise the national strike committee. "Passage of the unprecedented military budget has started a flood of inquiries to us from student groups and individuals who want to register their disapproval of the war program by joining in the strike," Mr. Lash asserted. One of the major focal points or the strike, Mr. Lash said, will be opposition to the R. O. T. C., in the face of extensive formation of new units and the increased federal appropriation. The official strike call is ex pected to go out one week after the conference ot student leaders in New York this Saturday. ASS All PROFESSORS OPPOSE FAITH OATH POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y. (ASU) The Vassar chapter of the Amer ican Association of University Professors has adopted a resolu tion urging repeal of the Ives law which requires an "oath of allegi ance" from teachers. Prof. Alice Snyder of the Eng lish department will represent Vassar at a hearing before an as sembly committee when the Kara insky bill, providing repeal of the law. will be argued. Meanwhile, a delegation of Vas sar students is being organized by the American Student Union chap ter there to journey to Albany m protest, against the revival of the Nunan student loyalty oath Mli. It is expetced that students from other colleges in the state will join in the delegation. POLLY GELLATLY HACK FROM CHILDREN THEATER MEETING Miss Polly Gcllatly. founder and director of the Children's Fi?y movement in the university, re turned Saturday from Baltimore where she spent four days at a - ..... '..;:.:::..::: : J-'rom The Lincoln Journal. conference of delegates from Jun ior League theaters all over the country. More tnan 250 attended the conference. Professors from Yale. North western, Pittsburgh, and other big universities spoke to the group on directing, acting, scenery, lighting, and costuming. "The most gratifying thing to me about the conference," stated Miss Gcllatly Monday, "was that our children's theater here stacks up very well with any of the others in the country. Our equipment is unusually good and we do five plays a year in comparison to the one or two which is all that most children's theaters manage." On her way home from the con ference, Miss Gellatly stopped in New York where, like the sailor who spends his vacation boating, she devoted every possible mo ment to seeing plays. She saw four. Of these, her favorite was "Victoria Rcgina," in which Helen Hayes took the title role. "The most beautiful thing in the play was the way that Queen Victoria grew old," Miss Gellatly said. "Her makeup and her ac tions changed subtly and com pletely as the play went on. The famous 'shaving scene' was won derful, too." Otl.r plays she saw were "Boy Meets Girl," a sophisticated com edy with fast dialogue, and "First Lady," a political satire. "Dead End." a gangster play with chil dren taking the leads, was "mar velous" too, she insisted. "One of the things that im pressed me most about all the plays," she confessed, "was the way that each member of the cast put his heart into his role. Not one of the plays was built around just one character with careless sup porting actors." New Y'ork has gone theater crazy in a big way, according to Miss Gellatly. The theaters them selves are small, seating about 1,600 on the average, less than the Liberty theater here In Lincoln. One show seats onlv 200. The size gives an intimate touch to plays and make the audience ieei vhmc to the actors. In Chicago Miss Gellatly saw Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontaine in "Taming of the Shrew." The play, a Theatre Guild production, was given at the Erlanger theatre. The playhouse had been made to look Elizabethan, and late comers in the audience were elaborately hushed and whispered at from every side when they entered, just as in Elizabethan times. Miss Gellatly was graduated from the University in 1925 and started teaching dramatics that September. She has produced since then 40 plays. Her biggest prob lem has been to find plays, good children's productions being very scarce, but of the 40 she has di rected, she has repeated only three of them. "Pollyanna," in which she took the leading role, was repeated three times, and "Snowwhite and the Seven Dwarfs" and "Rackety Packety House" twice each. Of the five plays she produces year ly, she appears personally in only one. The most tnrming pan sne ever took was the part of Peter Pan, which she feels should always be played by a grown person. "Pollyanna" is the play she most enjoyed producing, for the sake of the children, but of all the roles she has ever acted, her favorite was the small part of Sarah Maud Ruggles in "Byrd's Christmas Carol." University students and children act in the children's plays. The youngest boy Miss Gellatly has ever worked with was Norman Walt, who was only four when he first began acting for her. Two thirteen-year-olds who have taken leader under her were George Blackstone and Bob Eager. As for the future of children's plays, Miss Gellatly is optimistic. "I cannot help thinking," she ad mitted, "that a conference of the sort I have just attended in Balti more will have something to give the younger generation." AG COLLEGE FAC.IT.TY, STUDENTS TEA GUESTS Students and faculty members on the agricultural college campus will be entertained at a tea in the Home Economics parlors on Thurs day afternoon from 3 to 5 o'clock. The Home Economics association members will act as hostesses. Paging jfie Smart Goed Typewriters All Hka for Ml or rent. Used machine on esy payment. Nebraska Typewriter Co. 130 No. It St. B2157 "The proper study of mankind iswoman." This isn't the right way to cap the quotation in the English Placement test. It im plies too little attention to Alex, ander Pope, Esq. of the 18th cen. tury and too much to less aca demic activities. But I am almost inclined to think this a fault In the right direction. Both library and beauty culture can be attained at the same time, but Pope, if necessary, can be put off. Your beauty must be studied and cared for in youth if you wish to have any beauty to care for in later life. I am going to take it for granted that you know how to keep your face truly clean and your skin healthy. Certainly, if your skin is not healthy there is no use expect, ing make-up to work miracles. A vibrant, colorful rouge will make the eyes seem brighter despite a muddy tired skin, but it will never look natural or enchantingly pi. quant. If your skin is good, the first thing to consider is its color. The color of your hair and eyes is not always a good guide. You may have blue eyes and blonde hair but an olive complexion. A clear, bright rouge and lipstick are best for any color skin, but an olive complexion calls for a particularly deep, bright shade. Red poppy rouge and lipstick will make the olive blonde glow. Red geranium, an even richer color, is perfect for the very dark olive skin. Peach bloom or mauresque powder ac cording to whether she is a dark or a light olive, will make the rouge blend naturally with the clear, warm skin tone of the rest of the face. The blonde with a fair trans lucent complexion should choose the new terra cotta shade of powder, rouge and lipstick to make the best of her naturally attrac tive qualities. And the warmth and vibrancy of these cosmetics will make a devastating contrast with her hair. If your hair is darK but your skin light, you might try red coral rouge and lipstick. You may be surprised by the added vivacity it gives you. If, however, there is little orange in your skin, the red raspberry rouge will undoubtedly looke better on you. It is a lovely rose color, bright but not too bright to blend easily into the skin and give that delicately healthy look which is the peculiar charm of some skins. Rachel, peach bloom or maure'sque powder will suit this type f skin. Is Your Frat or Sorority Giving a Dance? Let us furnish the music with our public address systems LOWEST prices Latest dance numbeN. Acorn Radio Eng. Co. B611I LUCKIES-A LIGHT SMOKE planning to attend the party ob- publicity and tirkets includes Klsie tain their tickets immediately Miss Barada said, "Tickets sales are Biixiiian chairman. Kathcnnc Jones, and Frances Schmit SENATE SELECTS ALUMN BOARD 10 CONTROL GREEKS Faculty Committee Names Members to Graduate Advisory Council. Twelve of the fifteen mem hers of the university senate committee on student organizations and so- cial functions met Wednesday and; selected seven members of the In- l terfraternity alumni council to serve as the Interfraterriity board of control, for the following two j years. Of the seven alumni fleeted ; only one change was made from ; the previous board, that being the i installation of Allen W. Fields in the place of Burks Harley. j In accordance with constitution j of the university the members are I to be elected every two years f rom ! the alumni council composed of one representative of each frater nity. Furthermore, the senate com mittee is to appoint two of its own members for a two year term who are to sit with the con trolling board. To complete the board two members of the student Jnterfraternity council are elected for membership for a one year term. Controls Fraternities. The board of control exercises complete jurisdiction over all fra ternities and fraternity house building associations affiliated with the university. They have full power to discipline and pass regulations governing the chapters and their members. Thru the sanctions of the board of regents the board has the final jurisdiction in all questions of chapter con trol, including the right to suspend the fraternity from rushing, pledg ing, initiating, holding social func tions, and to close the chapter house for any period of time. The present board of control as elected Wednesday is as follows: Claude S. Wilson, Alpha Tau Omega. Clarence E. Hinds, Chi Phi. , John Curtiss, Delta Chi. Dr. C. A. Bumstead, Delta Upsilon. John L. Champe, Phi Gamma Delta. Vance Traphagtn, Phi Kappa Psi. Alien W. Field, Sigma Alpha Epsilon. The Alumni Counc il which is I composed of one representative of each house arid which is delegated the power to decide problems of a lesser nature concerning fraterni ties is as follows: I'l'rry Murlnn. nii'lii. lr. I. V lnwtih. Allihu C.iiriiniA Itho. K. I. Viililr. Alpha fciiima I'M. l mli- s. WiUnn, lilm lull omi'KU, liirt'iire llimltlaii, lirla SUliui I'm. 'i iii k. HiiriHT, H"t iiiciii ri. ( liirini'i' HlmU. Chi I'lii. Ir. I.nv Ni'lii'iT. llHtn SiKiim IIHIu. fr.. t . Ilnilili-r. Ili'lln siciiia iJimlMlH. I . Dull- l inn. In lla Inn lli'ltn. Ir. 4 . K. Ilumsli'itil, lilfii I P-llnn. I-., s. I' rirlrli.. I iirm limit'. Oriiiiin ,. knit:, Kiiiu Nikiiih. .Ii'-h 4 nrri'll, l.iiniliilu 4 hi Alplm. -luii'iili ii'l.iira. I'm Mphn Hii. Itnrkti Hiirl.-v. I'tii llrll llirlu. John I.. lmniM, I'M 4iinttiui t'Wlu. iiih TrHih:iii'ti, I'lil Klllll I'-l. Kulph llei'i'lllier. Till KIKIIIH ttupn. .Ihll Ki'lliii;. I'l K.-tiin Alpllu. Mli-n W. I ii hl. il.-nm Alfthn Million. tlymi'il Riisi-iihiTU. slifma Alpha lu III. ILjilfih Iriliuiil. SiKHi:i 4 hi. I.lnyil t nrp. Sigma Nil. Hiirtli-ttf 4 hiinilif rv Memn I'hl Kfrnllnn. ThfulHrp Klmtiiill. ThHtt hi. Arthur Nrvliin. 'I lift i. Dr. K. K. Milrrii'tanl, M l'l I'hl. lui'l Mniiin, .i-tu lii'fii Tim. Classified ADVERTISING 10C PR LINE I JT OF RICH, RIPE-BODIED TOBACCO-"IT'S TOASTED" I S I r?J 1 Luckies I w, UZ are less acid j I ljgS.l - g?.! Luckies are less acid Copyright I93C. Tb Amvletn Tubteoo Comptaj IvOST LnMhw notetMH.lc. nume Arr nella ('rirnphell fnPrn)vri fin fnmf, nnnr Andrews. Call B10 19 evening. Reward. Excess of Acidity of Other Popular Brands Over Lucky Strike Cigarettes BALANCE LUCKY STRIKE BRAND RAND BRAND Recent chemical tests show that other popular brands have an excels of acid ity over Lucky Strike of from 535 to 1 00. KEiUlTS VERIFIED IY INDEPENDENT CHEMICA1 LABORATORIES AND RESEARCH CROUPS . . . 7 Mt M M W M M M Over a period of years, certain basic advances have been made in the selection and treatmentof cigarette tobaccosfor Lucky Strike Cigarettes. They include preliminary analyses of the tobaccos selected; use of center leaves; the higher heat treatment of tobacco ("toasting"); con sideration of acid-alkaline balance, with consequent definite improve ment in flavor; and controlled uniformity in the finished product. All these combine to produce a superior cigarette a modern cig arette, a cigarette made of rich, ripe-bodied tobaccos A Light Smoke. -"IT'S TOASTED" Your throat protection against irritation against cough